MiCA 2.0 a globální standard shody
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The European Union's Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) framework, fully enacted in 2024, has become the de facto template for global digital asset regulation. In 2026, we are seeing "MiCA 2.0" effects, as other major jurisdictions align their rules and the EU begins refining its own. The focus has sharpened from initial registration to operational compliance, particularly concerning proof of reserves, consumer protection, and the delineation between securities and non-securities like Bitcoin.
For exchanges and custodians, this means rigorous, real-time attestations and stricter custody requirements, significantly raising operational costs and creating a high barrier to entry. For Bitcoin itself, this regulatory cementation is a double-edged sword. On one hand, it provides clarity that encourages traditional finance to engage. On the other, it risks creating a "two-tier" system: compliant, KYC-heavy on-ramps for the masses, and a persistent, peer-to-peer (P2P) and privacy-focused ecosystem for the technically adept. The great regulatory battle of 2026 is not about banning Bitcoin, but about defining and potentially restricting the tools for financial privacy that exist around it, like CoinJoins and privacy-enhancing wallets.
Is the "two-tier" system (compliant vs. private) an acceptable compromise for mainstream adoption, or does it undermine permissionless, censorship-resistant access? Are you more or less likely to use a regulated exchange today than in 2023?
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